A
leading scholar on Florida history and specialist in Latin American affairs,
Prof. A. J. Hanna had been associated with Rollins for more than six
decades, likely the longest among all faculty members of the college
community.

Born
in Tampa on May 5, 1893, Alfred Jackson Hanna was the son of Josiah Calvin
Hanna and Sarah Jackson Hanna. He was descended from a family of pioneers
who settled in the Citrus County in 1840, before Florida was admitted to the
Union. After graduating from the Hillsborough High School in 1911, Hanna
attended the Eastman School and worked briefly in New York before enrolling
at Rollins College in 1914. First appeared shy and reserved, Hanna quickly
distinguished him on campus. In addition to his membership in Phi Alpha
fraternity, he was the president of the Delphic Society, the undergraduate
literary organization at Rollins. While a student, he also worked as an
instructor for both Shorthand and Commercial English. More impressively, he
had served as secretary to the faculty and to Dr. William Blackman, fourth
president of Rollins College. During his junior year Hanna became the
Editor-in-Chief of Sandspur, the student weekly newspaper, and in
1917, he worked as the editor of Tomokan, the inaugural volume of
Rollins yearbook.

Upon
graduation, Hanna became the registrar of the Business School and the
president of the Rollins Alumni Association. After one year of leave of
absence enlisting in the US Naval Reserve Force at the end of World War I,
Hanna returned to Rollins and worked as assistant to president and assistant
treasurer, and the editor of the inaugural issue of Rollins Alumni Record.
However his real passion was in history, and in 1928-29 he was named an
instructor in the History Department. A year later he became assistant
professor, and in the following year he was again promoted, this time to
associate professor. By 1938 Hanna had reached the rank of full professor
and ten years later, he was named the first endowed chair of Weddell
Professor of American History at Rollins, a title he held until his
retirement in 1969.

To
countless students, Hanna was a well-known and respected teacher. As one of
the most popular faculty members on campus, he was sought for his ability to
transpose dead facts of the past into a living adventure in the classrooms.
An early supporter of Hamilton Holt’s Conference Plan of teaching at
Rollins, Hanna believed that students benefit the best when they had a
chance “to think for themselves and learn together with their teacher.”[1]
When naming him as one of the “GREAT TEACHERS” of Rollins in 1955, one
former student nominated Hanna “for his qualities of exacting scholarly
research, and his ability to make history a living subject.”[2]
Known both as a tough taskmaster and “father confessor”, Hanna had formed
many lasting friendships and ties with Rollins graduates during the four
decades of his teaching career. On the occasion of his retirement in 1969,
the Rollins Board of Trustees proclaimed “By Dr. Hanna’s strict demand for
academic excellence, he won for the College the praise of educators and the
affection and respect of the students. From his tireless interest and
devoted service, Rollins College stands out as a leader in Latin American
relations and international understanding. His personal and professional
life has attracted to Rollins College untold numbers of friends and
supporters.”[3]

To
many people outside of the Rollins community, Hanna was better known as a
scholar who had written a number of books, mostly dealing with Florida
history and Latin American affairs.As the editor of Rollins
Sandspur, Tomokan and Alumni Record, Hanna had been a
published writer since his days as a Rollins student. However he did not
established himself as a historical scholar until the 1930s. His first major
book, Flight into Oblivion (Johnson Publishing, 1938), was a
well-researched and exciting tale of the flight of the Confederate Cabinet
after the Southern defeat at the end of American Civil War. The book broke
new ground, uncovered many new facts and was nicely received, including a
favorable review in the New York Herald Tribune from Henry Steele
Commager, one of America’s outstanding historians.

Hanna’s second major work, A Prince in Their Midist, was published by
the University of Oklahoma Press in 1946. It documented the adventures of
Achille Murat, the nephew of Napoleon I, who came to Florida after
Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo. In this book Hanna recounted the experience
of this old world aristocrat and his efforts to find elusive success on
Florida’s frontier. Also well received, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Florida’s
most prominent novelist, reviewed the book in the New York Herald Tribune.

When
speaking on A. J. Hanna, it would be impossible not to mention his wife and
scholarship companion. On July 5, 1941, after 12 years of courting, Hanna
finally married Kathryn Abbey, a leading Florida historian and the love of
his life. Receiving her BA, MA and PhD from Northwestern University, Abbey
had been the chair of History Department at the Florida State University for
15 years. She agreed to marry Hanna, only after she learned the historical
fact that he was actually two years older than she. Since then they worked
happily together, published the Lake Okeechobee in 1948 and
Florida’s Golden Sands in 1950, and embarked an incredible journey of
collaborative scholarship.

Hanna’s last major book also represented his most ambitious scholarly
effort. Along with his wife Kathryn, Hanna spent over a quarter of a century
researching and writing an account of Napoleon III’s incredible attempt to
extend his empire into North America and how that effort failed because of
America’s commitment to republic government in the new world. Published by
the University of North Carolina Press in 1971, Napoleon III and Mexico:
American Triumph over Monarch firmly established Hanna’s reputation as a
leading scholar on the history of US-Mexico relations.[4]
However not many people know that Hanna lost most his eyesight while working
on this project, a great feat of courage and scholarly dedication. In
addition, Hanna had collaborated with Novelist James B. Cabell to publish
the St. Johns: a Paradise of Diversities (Farrar
& Rinehart, 1943), an influential title in the Rivers of America
Series. He also contributed to the Dictionary of American Biography,
Dictionary of American History, and to a number of other leading
historical journals.

Dedicated his life to the cause of preserving and making accessible the
historical records of the state, Hanna developed the Union Catalog of
Floridiana, a comprehensive collection of materials throughout the world
relating to Florida. He was also responsible for the establishment of
Florida Collection at Rollins, one of the best in the country. Along with
Edwin Grover and William Yust, Hanna helped found the Book-A-Year Club in
the 1930s, a library endowment fund at Rollins that grows with a current
market value of over 3.2 million dollars. It is fair to say that without
Hanna, there would not be the rare Florida Collection and Rollins Archives
that we treasure so much today.

Hanna’s
impact went far beyond his roles as a history teacher and scholar. During
his years at Rollins, Hanna had acted as secretary or advisor to seven of
its presidents. He organized the alumni association, founded and edited its
magazine and raised money whenever needed. Actively involved in fund-raising
for buildings, endowment, equipment and scholarships, Hanna was not only the
chairman of the History Department and director of Inter-American Studies
(1942-58), but also the first vice president (1951-69) and a member of the
Rollins Board of Trustees (1969-78). According to Hamilton Holt, eighth
president of Rollins: “In a long and varied experience in serving on
committees, I have never found a man who is more efficient in, or devoted to
his work than Fred Hanna. The Alumni of Rollins are to be congratulated on
having such an ardent and devoted worker on behalf of their College.”[5]

Well
known in international historical circles, Hanna was a member of a number of
honorary societies in the U.S. and abroad. He was the former president of
the Florida Historical Society, former director of the Southern Historical
Association, chairman of the Latin American Division of the Florida State
Chamber of Commerce, president of the Florida Audubon Society, and vice
president of the Florida Academy of Sciences. He was also a member of the
Authors Club of London, founding president of the Hispanic Institute of
Florida. In addition, he was featured in Who’s Who in America,
Who’s Who in American Education, and the Directory of American
Scholars.

In
recognition of his historical achievement, Hanna was decorated with Officer d’Academie, Palmes Universitaires by the French Government in 1935. The
award was instituted in 1808 by Napoleon as a civil decoration and awarded
to those who have especially distinguished themselves in connection with
education, art, science or literature. In 1945, Hanna was awarded an
honorary Doctor of Humanities from Rollins College; in 1953, he was
presented the Centennial Award from the University of Florida for his
“distinguished contribution in the field of letters, education and
inter-cultural understanding”; and finally in 1977, for his contributions in
the field of history, Hanna was presented the Award of Merit by the American
Association for State and Local History.

When
Hanna passed away in 1978, it had been specially requested that in lieu of
flowers, contributions be made to the Rollins College Book-A-Year fund. As
noted by Fred Hicks, then acting president of the College: “Dr. Hanna
distinguished himself as a scholar, educator and administrator, and the
College, its faculty and student body have benefited from his association,”
as his “service to Rollins for the past 60 years has been an inspiration to
many in the College community.”[6]
Though a loss to Rollins, Central Florida and the world of scholarship,
Hanna’s legacy has lived on, and the creation of A. J. Hanna Award in 2009
is probably the best way to honor the man who dedicated all his life to his
alma mater and to the pursuit of historical knowledge.